Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/697800
Washington 88/69 New York 81/69 Miami 90/77 Atlanta 87/71 Detroit 73/53 Houston 91/73 Chicago 71/54 Minneapolis 78/60 Kansas City 84/63 El Paso 87/71 Denver 90/61 Billings 91/61 Los Angeles 92/65 San Francisco 73/55 Seattle 81/59 AIRQUALITYFORECAST Whatitmeans:0-50:Good; 51-100:Moderate; 101-150:Unhealthyforsensitivepeople; 151+:Unhealthyforall. Source: Airnow.gov City Today'sairquality City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W CALIFORNIA CITIES National and world forecast s-sunny,pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy,sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain,sf-snow flurries,sn-snow,i-ice City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Summary National Extremes World Extremes North and South America Asia, Australia Africa CarsonCity Hawthorne Reno Herlong Lovelock Sacramento Yuba City Napa Ukiah Chico Corning Lakeview Alturas Susanville Redding Red Bluff Laytonville Fort Bragg Point Arena Eureka Redway Mount Shasta Yreka Crescent City Ashland Shown is today's weather. Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows. Shown are today's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. ALMANAC Precipitation Temperatures ALLERGY REPORT Pollenlevels Source: National Allergy Bureau TODAY'S UV INDEX (The higher the number, the faster skin damage will occur.) Extreme Very high High Moderate Low SUN SETTINGS, MOON PHASES Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Hoursofsunlight River Levels SacramentoRiver Flood 7a.m. 24-hr Stage yest. chg. Lake Levels Elevation Yesterday Storage (acre-feet) Percent Capacity Q: A: WEDNESDAY 106° 74° THURSDAY 106° 73° Sunn y to p artly cloudy and hot Ho t with blazing sunshine FRIDAY 103° 70° Mostly sunn y and ho t SATURDAY 98° 68° Mostly sunn y and wa rm TODAY 105° 72° Sizzling sunshine and hot. Clear tonight. High ..................................................................... 103° Low ........................................................................ 70° Normal high ......................................................... 94° Normal low ........................................................... 64° Record high ........................................... 109° in 2003 Record low .............................................. 53° in 1963 Humidity noon today ........................................ 21% 24 hours through 2 p.m. yesterday ................. 0.00" Month to date ................................................... 1.27" Normal month to date ..................................... 0.45" Season to date ................................................ 23.37" Normal season to date .................................. 23.87" Red Bluff through 2 p.m. yesterday Chico .......................................................... Moderate Napa ........................................................... Moderate Red Bluff .............................................. Not available Redding ............................................... Not available Yuba City ................................................... Moderate Allergy, dust and dander today: Neutral Grass ............. Moderate Mold .........................Low Trees ............. Moderate Weeds ........... Moderate 8 Highest at 12 p.m. Today 5:42 a.m. 8:42 p.m. 1:28 a.m. 2:26 p.m. Wednesday 5:43 a.m. 8:42 p.m. 2:05 a.m. 3:35 p.m. 15 hr., 00 min. Jul4 New Jul11 First Full Jul19 Last Jul26 aboveBendBridge......................27 ...........3.70 .......none atHamiltonCity.........................148 ......129.30 .......none atOrdFerry................................114 ........96.70 .......none atRedBluffDiversionDam.......253 ......239.00 .......none atTehamaBridge ......................213 ......201.70 .......none atVinaWoodsonBridge............183 ......167.50 .......none BlackButte ....................457.75..............76,318 .....53.1% LakeOroville..................866.21.........3,031,763 .....81.1% LakeShasta .................1045.85.........3,949,280 .....86.8% LakeTrinity..................2285.80.........1,301,066 .....49.1% Whiskeytown...............1209.07............238,119 .....98.8% Weather Trivia ™ How often does lightning strike the Earth? 100 times each second. this is equivalent to 4 billion kilowatts. Today Wednesday Anaheim 96/63/s 94/63/pc Bakersfield 105/77/pc 106/76/s Chula Vista 86/64/pc 85/64/pc Crescent City 62/53/s 63/53/s Death Valley 117/85/pc 115/86/t Eureka 64/53/s 67/52/s Fremont 85/57/s 84/57/s Fresno 108/75/s 108/72/s Glendale 97/65/s 94/63/pc Huntington Beach 80/66/pc 79/65/pc Irvine 91/64/pc 89/63/pc Lake Tahoe 84/45/s 84/45/t Long Beach 85/66/pc 87/65/pc Los Angeles 92/65/s 89/63/pc Mammoth Mountain 87/53/pc 88/49/t Modesto 105/67/s 106/66/s Monterey 69/52/s 68/53/s Moreno Valley 104/65/pc 102/63/pc Napa 96/54/s 93/54/s Needles 115/89/pc 113/91/pc Oakland 76/55/s 74/56/s Oxnard 78/62/pc 77/60/pc Redding 105/72/s 106/74/s Riverside 102/65/pc 101/63/pc Sacramento 101/62/s 99/60/s San Bernardino 107/67/pc 104/66/pc San Diego 81/69/pc 80/67/pc San Francisco 73/55/s 72/55/s San Jose 87/59/s 87/59/s San Luis Obispo 88/56/s 84/54/s Santa Ana 87/67/pc 84/66/pc Santa Barbara 77/60/pc 75/57/pc Santa Clarita 100/64/s 99/62/s Stockton 103/61/s 103/60/s Ventura 81/60/pc 78/58/pc Yosemite Valley 96/65/s 93/63/t Today Wednesday Albuquerque 91/67/t 90/69/t Atlanta 87/71/t 91/68/pc Baltimore 84/66/t 82/64/pc Boston 79/65/c 77/65/pc Buffalo 74/56/t 74/54/pc Chicago 71/54/pc 79/59/s Cincinnati 83/57/pc 78/56/s Dallas 94/76/t 97/77/pc Denver 90/61/t 87/60/t Detroit 73/53/pc 80/55/s El Paso 87/71/t 92/73/t Fargo 81/59/s 83/59/s Honolulu 85/74/pc 87/75/pc Houston 91/73/t 91/74/t Indianapolis 79/55/pc 77/57/pc Kansas City 84/63/pc 81/64/t Las Vegas 110/84/pc 107/87/pc Louisville 87/61/s 80/61/s Miami 90/77/t 90/78/t Minneapolis 78/60/s 81/66/t New Orleans 90/76/t 89/77/t New York City 81/69/t 84/68/pc Oklahoma City 90/68/t 92/70/s Showers and thunderstorms will extend across much of the Southern states to along much of the Eastern Seaboard today. A few storms can be locally drenching and gusty, especially in the South. Slightly cooler and less humid air will expand eastward from the Midwest to part of the Appalachians. As an influx of moisture from Mexico spreads northward, spotty thunderstorms are forecast to erupt during the afternoon over the deserts and Rockies. Severe storms will affect parts of the High Plains. Much of the Pacific Coast states will be dry. High ........................... 114° in Needles, CA Low ............................ 31° in Leadville, CO High ................... 120° in Mitribah, Kuwait Low ..... -6° in Summit Station, Greenland Bogota 62/50/pc 64/49/c Buenos Aires 55/42/pc 62/48/pc Caracas 89/78/pc 89/77/pc Ensenada 88/64/pc 88/63/pc Mexico City 73/53/t 72/55/t Montreal 76/62/sh 74/60/pc Rio de Janeiro 78/66/pc 78/65/pc Tijuana 87/65/pc 85/64/pc Toronto 74/57/t 78/53/pc Vancouver 76/60/s 74/59/s Orlando 92/75/t 92/75/t Philadelphia 82/70/t 84/68/pc Phoenix 108/90/t 106/88/t Pittsburgh 79/58/pc 76/55/pc Portland, ME 76/62/t 73/59/t Portland, OR 84/58/s 84/58/s St. Louis 87/63/s 83/66/pc Salt Lake City 100/76/pc 98/70/pc Seattle 81/59/s 80/58/s Tucson 100/81/t 96/77/t Washington, DC 88/69/t 83/69/pc Cairo 96/75/s 98/75/s Casablanca 84/67/s 84/66/s Johannesburg 66/37/s 66/38/s Kinshasa 86/70/s 85/70/s Lagos 83/75/c 85/76/sh Nairobi 73/51/c 73/53/c Tripoli 94/69/s 92/72/s Baghdad 114/85/s 116/87/s Beijing 79/68/t 88/70/c Hong Kong 91/82/sh 92/82/t Jerusalem 81/67/s 84/68/s Kabul 89/64/sh 91/67/s Manila 90/78/t 91/78/c Melbourne 59/47/s 57/47/pc New Delhi 95/84/c 97/84/pc Seoul 85/69/pc 85/70/pc Singapore 87/79/t 88/79/pc Sydney 62/45/s 63/47/s Tehran 96/73/s 102/78/s Tokyo 75/69/r 77/70/sh Amsterdam 67/55/pc 66/57/c Athens 92/75/s 88/73/t Belgrade 73/61/t 82/62/s Berlin 73/57/pc 76/60/pc Budapest 77/57/pc 84/59/s Dublin 59/50/r 62/48/r London 65/52/r 62/56/r Madrid 95/66/pc 94/65/t Moscow 75/57/pc 77/60/pc Paris 71/56/pc 71/57/pc Rome 85/64/s 86/66/pc Stockholm 69/52/pc 68/55/pc Vienna 77/56/pc 83/65/s Zurich 76/58/t 78/60/t 93/57 100/64 99/63 98/64 100/59 101/62 105/64 96/54 95/57 105/69 105/72 89/53 93/50 95/50 105/72 105/72 96/61 70/54 74/54 64/53 88/54 92/58 94/59 62/53 91/58 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016 By Jill Lawless and Danica Kirka The Associated Press LONDON Prime Minister David Cameron insisted Monday that Britain's shock vote to leave the European Union won't send the econ- omy into a tailspin, even as Standard & Poor's stripped the U.K. of its top credit rat- ing. As stock markets and the pound continued to de- cline, Cameron insisted the British economy was robust and could withstand the shockwaves created by the result. "It is clear that mar- kets are volatile, there are some companies consider- ing their investments and we know this is going to be far from plain sailing," Cameron told lawmakers as the House of Commons met for the first time since last week's referendum. "How- ever, we should take con- fidence from the fact that Britain is ready to confront what the future holds for us from a position of strength." Hours after he spoke, Standard & Poor's knocked the U.K.'s sovereign rat- ing by two notches, from AAA to AA, saying an EU exit "will lead to a less pre- dictable, stable and effec- tive policy framework in the U.K." The agency also said it was keeping a negative out- look on the rating, which means it could downgrade the country further. It cited risks to the economy and public finances, the pound's role as an international re- serve currency and "risks to the constitutional and eco- nomic integrity of the U.K." as Scotland's strong vote to remain in the EU could raise the prospect of an- other referendum on Scot- tish independence. Despite the uncertainty fueling financial instabil- ity, leaders in both Britain and the EU signaled there would be no immediate start to negotiations on an EU exit. German Chancellor An- gela Merkel met with her French and Italian coun- terparts and said "we agree there will be no formal or informal talks" until the British government offi- cially declares its intention to quit by invoking Article 50 of the EU treaty. The statement appeared to scotch hopes by Con- servative lawmaker Boris Johnson and his Vote Leave campaign to hold prelimi- nary talks on the general outlines of a deal before Ar- ticle 50 triggers a two-year countdown to a British exit. Earlier, Merkel said she understood that Britain may need "a certain amount of time to analyze things," but said a "long-term sus- pension" of the question wouldn't be in either side's economic interest. Cameron announced last week he would resign by the fall after failing to persuade a majority of voters to back continued EU membership, saying his successor should be the one to navigate Brit- ain's departure from the EU. Cameron said he spoke Monday with Merkel and French President Francois Hollande, and made plain this was not the time to start the process. "We have discussed the need to prepare for the ne- gotiations and in particular the fact that the British gov- ernment will not be trigger- ing Article 50 at this stage," he said. Meanwhile, U.S. Secre- tary of State John Kerry, in Brussels and London to ad- dress fallout from the vote, said the U.S. has "immense confidence in ... the lead- ership on both sides of the channel" to negotiate a deal — and urged the EU not to treat Britain in a "revenge- ful" manner. Amid signs the uncer- tainty was hitting business confidence, a leading busi- ness group said 20 percent of its members planned to move some of their oper- ations out of the U.K. The Institute of Directors said a survey of its 1,000 mem- bers showed three out of four believe Britain's exit from the EU will be bad for business. About a quarter said they would freeze hir- ing and 5 percent said they would cut jobs. "Ultimately we think that our members are very resil- ient, we think that British business is tough and will adapt, but certainly at the moment there is a lot of ner- vousness," said Edwin Mor- gan, the head of media re- lations. The pound hit a new 31- year low Monday, drop- ping another 3.5 percent to $1.3199, while stock mar- kets declined across Eu- rope. Bank shares were particularly hard hit. Shares in Royal Bank of Scotland, once the world's largest bank and now mostly state-owned after a taxpayer bailout in 2008, closed 15 percent lower af- ter dropping by as much as 25 percent. Treasury chief George Osborne pledged not to im- pose a new austerity budget — even though he warned earlier that would be neces- sary if the "leave" side pre- vailed — saying the next budget would be the task of Cameron's successor. BREXIT UKcreditratingslashed,Cameroninsistseconomyfine REDBLUFFOUTDOORPOWER 490AntelopeBlvd.527.5741 ORLAND SAW & MOWER 235 E. Walker St. 865.8800 QUALITY SAW & MOWER 2901 Douglas St. Anderson 365.8700 10% OFF ANY SERVICE OR REPAIR exp.April20,2016 WESELLTHEBESTAndSERVICETHEREST! 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